Brambles: A Thorn Short Story by Intisar Khanani (free ebook reader for pc .txt) ๐
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- Author: Intisar Khanani
Read book online ยซBrambles: A Thorn Short Story by Intisar Khanani (free ebook reader for pc .txt) ๐ยป. Author - Intisar Khanani
โI hope we will meet again,โ I say, wiping my cheeks. The wind only rustles around me again. It has no words to answer, but it flutters along beside me as I make my way out of the woods, and leaves me only as I near the gates.
I whisper a goodbye after it, certain it understands, and hurry to the stables. Itโs foolish, perhaps, for itโs the first place my brother will come when he returns. But I must ask someone, and there is the young woman who generally looks after my horse. Redna is her name.
โPlease,โ I say as she steps out of an empty stall, a pitchfork in her hands. โDo you know where the girl isโthe one whom Valka blamed yesterday?โ
Redna is tall and tanned, her brown hair always braided back, and her plain features usually smiling. Now, though, she studies me silently, then shakes her head. โCanโt say, Highness.โ
โI justโI wanted to make sure she was safe.โ
Rednaโs brows rise, and then she smiles. โShe is, Highness. We all put in to give her some money, and she left before the sun set yesterday. Canโt say where she went, though Iโm sure someone knows. No good letting that information out, if you know what I mean.โ
I do. I wouldnโt want my brother to be able to track her down either. โIโm glad, then,โ I say.
Redna reaches out and gently plucks a leaf from my hair. โYouโd best go on, Highness.โ
I blink at her, taken aback by the care in her actions coupled with the dismissal in her words.
She gestures with the leaf toward the back of the stables. โThat way to the kitchens. If your brother comes in behind you, itโs best not to be here.โ
โThe kitchens?โ I repeat.
โYouโll be hungry,โ Redna says, letting the leaf fall and turning once more to the stall. โAnd I donโt know that Iโve heard of your brother stopping into the kitchens of his own accord.โ
Sheโs right. That is the realm of servants, and my brother would never deign to set foot there. But I cannot imagine it will be a place for me, either.
โGo on,โ Redna says, flapping her hand at me.
I mumble my thanks and take her advice, following the servantsโ path from the back of the stables around the hall to the kitchen. Itโs a noisy, warm place, filled with conversation that dies at the sight of me.
โHighness?โ a woman asks, tall and well-built, her work dress patched but sturdy, her front dusted with flour. โCan I help you?โ
I glance around. The remaining servants all watch me in return. Perhaps she is the head cook. I have never met her before.
โI wondered if Iโwell, Iโm a little hungry.โ
โI can have some food sent up to your room for you,โ the cook says, her tone uncertain.
โIโyes, but . . .โ But my brother will easily find me there. โI wondered if I could just stay here for a few minutes? By the fire, perhaps?โ
The cook looks at me with dawning comprehension, but there is no pity in that look. Instead, her eyes sharpen and she says, her voice steely, โYouโll always be welcome to warm yourself here, princess. Dara, set a stool there for Her Highness and get her some fresh bread rolls and a pat of butter.โ
โThank you,โ I say, but the cook just waves a hand at me, not unlike Redna, and turns back to her work.
I perch on the stool that the girl, Dara, moves near the fire for me, and accept with gratitude the plate of bread and butter she delivers. Around me, the kitchen staff fall back into the rhythm of their work, and after a time, as I finish my first roll and begin on my second, the conversation starts up again.
I lean against the warm stones behind me, resting my head as I watch the servants preparing the midday meal. Dara catches my eye and flashes me a smile before returning to her chopping. Cook brandishes a large wooden spoon at another girl who, apparently, should know better what size pieces to chop an onion into.
When I turn to set my plate down, I find another one has been placed there, a single slice of honey cake set upon it. A special treat, one that no doubt the queen might have had set aside for herself. I look up again, but everyone is busy, leaving me to wonder at their kindness.
I pick up the plate with a sense of hope. There are consequences to silence and consequences to speaking. I do not regret speaking up to defend the serving girl, or stopping Valka before she could finish walking the path from prank to murder, though every action has its consequences.
But, as I sit with my honey cake in the warmth of the hall kitchen, I know that my mother was wrong. I may have fallen, fallen from my family and, no doubt, from the courtโs favorโbut I am far from alone.
Thank you so much for reading! I hope you enjoyed meeting Alyrra, and will check out her novel-length story in Thorn, a retelling of the Grimmโs โThe Goose Girl,โ that picks up three years after this tale ends.
To find out about new releases, giveaways, and connect with me, sign up for my monthly Author Newsletter. Youโll also get access to Dragon Slayer Number 9, an exclusive short story just for newsletter subscribers.
A princess with two futures. A destiny all her own.
Between her cruel family and the contempt she faces at court, Princess Alyrra has always longed to escape the confines of her royal life. But when sheโs betrothed to the powerful prince Kestrin, Alyrra embarks on a journey to his land with little hope for a better future.
When a
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